asking students to givepeers positive feedback may benefit the giver (and receiver). Similarly, an opportunity in themiddle of the term to give positive feedback to teaching assistants (TAs) and/or the professorcould be meaningful. This can have a practical benefit by allowing students reinforce what theylike.In courses related to professional skills or transitioning to college, specific training on self-kindness could be integrated. Smeets et al. [18] described a group intervention around self-compassion. Although this was done outside-of-class with volunteers, a similar activity could beintegrated into a course with the appropriate scaffolding. For example, students could be giventhe assessment instrument (the 12-item self-compassion scale
- ally established cybersecurity professionals rather than under-shortage of nearly three million cybersecurity professionals represented minorities [8]. Other barriers to underrepresentedand staff [1]. Nearly 60 % of organizations report that they minority participation in CTF competitions include:are at an extreme or moderate cyber risk due to the highstaff shortage [1]. The ISC2 Cybersecurity Workforce Study • Students have limited knowledge or exposure to cyberreport notes that 17 % of the cybersecurity workforce who concepts in the undergraduate curriculum. Of the 300identified as being a minority were female, and 9 percent colleges and universities that are designated as
virtually going to factories, R&D studios, and laboratories. In addition,spreadsheets and video are used as part of the integrated PBL-VR modules. This work has beenongoing for several years, and several universities and companies have adopted the technology,however, the paper does not provide any formal assessments on its effectiveness.The authors in [58] develop a set of VR models, PBL, and case studies to be integrated withvarious courses in the industrial engineering curriculum and help address competency gaps inmanufacturing workforce. Student teams are assigned to work on industry-based projects thatrequire VR walk-through tours enabled by a discrete-event simulation model of an actual Boeingmanufacturing line. A formal rubric is used for
Teaching of Institutional Core CurriculaAbstract We have been teaching Institutional core curricula courses at The University of Texas atEl Paso (UTEP) since 1996. The course curricula, sources, and most relevant, the innovations inteaching each course have impacted STEM student success and learning. The Texas Core Curriculum (TCC) is defined by the Texas Education Code (TEC)Section 61.821 as: ... "the curriculum in liberal arts, humanities, and sciences and political,social, and cultural history that all undergraduate students of an institution of higher educationare required to complete before receiving an academic undergraduate degree." Texas Senate Bill(SB) 148, passed by the 75th Texas Legislature in
. Exam scores were improved when measuring studentsability to create use cases, especially clarity and completeness. Student performance was greatlyimproved when writing use cases, especially clarity and completeness which was reflected inimproved projects. Quantitatively, the same mindset objectives were assessed in other coursemodules as part a larger curriculum wide effort in Engineering. The numerical results indicatethat the modules in this course outperformed other modules in the curriculum for most of themindset objectives. Ultimately, the results indicate these types of modules may play an importantrole in entrepreneurial mindset development for computer science students.IntroductionThis paper describes a set of modules designed to
Paper ID #33711Assessing Elementary Students’ Engineering Design Thinking with an”Evaluate-And-Improve” Task (Fundamental)Nicole Alexandra Batrouny, Tufts University Nicole Batrouny is a PhD candidate in Mechanical Engineering at Tufts University. Her engineering education research interests include upper elementary engineering education, integrated science and en- gineering, collaboration in engineering, and decision making in engineering. For her Master’s thesis, she uncovered talk moves used by 4th grade students that fostered collaborative, disciplinary decision-making during an engineering design outreach program. For
cohesion, collaboration, and communication, while widespreadpreference for Marginalization can result in weak workplace culture that lacks goals or missionand lead to low employee job satisfaction, engagement, and retention.By contrast, when most employees adopt an Integration attitude, the chances of diversitybecoming an accepted feature of the overall workplace culture are expected to increase, leadingto the multiculturalism of values, beliefs, and ideas that spawn creativity, innovation, equity, andinclusion [19]-[21]. Thus, maximizing the likelihood that engineers bring or are encouraged todevelop an Integration attitude to their jobs seems like the best approach for increasing thediversity in the engineering workforce. We will determine which
.” - Denis WaitleyIntroduction This research is a work in progress, an offshoot of an exploratory integration study ofSTEM + computational thinking (STEM+C) for minority girls. The larger study is a joint effortamongst a community center, an educational research institute and a STEM center at auniversity. These partners designed, tested and implemented the integration of newcomputational thinking (CT) practices into a research-based STEM program. The study islongitudinal, spanning two school years, in 10-week, twice weekly, 90-minute program. One ofthe goals of the program is to learn how to inspire, motivate and bolster minority girls STEM andCT abilities and perceptions. The purpose of this work in progress is to study how anintervention
PETGUI program.2. BackgroundFor digital logic courses, PETGUI offers a rich set of useful functionalities that can be integratedinto course curriculum and educational outreach. The software is a front-end for a Java-basedcode repository that supports advanced experiments in program protection and exploitationrelated to hardware security that has been part of several master’s and doctoral thesis topics [1-11]. The software integrates popular algorithms and synthesis tools such as UC Berkeley’sEspresso [12] and ABC [13] in an easy-to-use interface. Visualization from the graph-based JavayEd library [14] provides the ability to see relationships between circuit form, structure, andfunctional representations. It also supports advanced concept
: Planning and Implementation (Experience)AbstractThis paper discusses the transition of an established residential Summer Bridge Program to avirtual learning experience due to the COVID-19 restrictions of summer 2020. The program aimsto increase retention of first-year engineering students through a curriculum focused on academicreadiness in math and chemistry, professional development, familiarity with campus andavailable resources, and a broad-based knowledge of engineering fields and the engineeringdesign process. Outside of the curriculum, participants build community and a sense ofbelonging with social, professional development, and philanthropic programming. With theconstraints of remote instruction, math readiness and community building were
Paper ID #32256Student Perceptions of Connections Between an Introductory DynamicSystems Class and Co-Op Work ExperienceDr. Diane L. Peters, Kettering University Dr. Peters is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Kettering University. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Student Perceptions of Connections Between an Introductory Dynamic Systems Class and Co-op Work ExperienceAbstractThis work focuses on connections that students see between co-op work assignments and aspecific class in their mechanical engineering curriculum
is engineering classroom, with an inclusive curriculum havingclassroom-based interventions, we will focus on organizational diversity promotion factor asan indicator of climate perception.Our proposed model based on the literature review is as follows:Figure1: Proposed Model (showing the relationship of Perceived climate, sense of belongingand engineering identity based on gender)Current StudyThis study sits within a larger study designed to help all engineering students develop aninclusive professional identity. In addition to having excellent technical skills, students withan inclusive professional identity [23] seek out diversity in teams, leverage diversity toimprove team dynamics and outcomes, and consider a wide range of potential
Paper ID #34970Creating a Diverse Next Generation of Technically- and Community-MindedSTEM Professionals (Experience)Dr. Denise M. Driscoll, Purdue University at West Lafayette (PPI) Dr. Denise M. Driscoll, Purdue University Dr. Driscoll is an experimental social psychologist with ex- pertise in stereotyping and prejudice, attitude and persuasion, diversity and inclusion, and managerial and intercultural business communication. Her experiences as an academic, diversity consultant, and admin- istrator over the last 30 years have helped her integrate broadening participation and inclusion practices across research
ElectronicAccess (Experience)AbstractThis paper will focus and comment on the operational variability introduced to a long-standing collaborative aimed at an underrepresented population of Native Americanengineering students in North Dakota. The focus of this paper will center on a decade-long distance-based education collaborative’s resilience to the rapid change incurred bythe adjustments forced upon education by the 2020 pandemic. The most notable of thechanges was the shift from having the majority of the student curriculum taught face toface (outside of the distance-based pre-engineering program) to suddenly the entirety ofthe learning experience moved online. For this particular program, this included the two-week Summer Camp experience at North
Paper ID #34200Work in Progress: Remote Instruction of Circuitry in a MultidisciplinaryIntroduction to Engineering First-year CourseDr. James E. Lewis, University of Louisville James E. Lewis, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering Fundamentals in the J. B. Speed School of Engineering at the University of Louisville. His research interests include paral- lel and distributed computer systems, cryptography, engineering education, undergraduate retention and technology (Tablet PCs) used in the classroom.Dr. Nicholas Hawkins, University of Louisville Nicholas Hawkins is an Assistant Professor in the
reform needed thatconnects creativity to engineering in an atmosphere that welcomes diversity. Introduction Engineering is a creative and diverse profession integral to the sustainability of a rapidlyevolving economy, and a field where the diversity and perspectives of women engineers isessential [1], [2], [3]. This study examined the creative self-efficacy (CSE) of undergraduatewomen engineering majors, their beliefs about creativity, how they describe themselves ascreative, and their lived experiences that influenced them to choose engineering as a career path.ABET [4] highlighted the significant connection of creativity in engineering curriculum to theengineering profession. The creative
Education, Purdue University. Also, she was the recipient of the ”President of Pakistan Merit and Talent Scholarship” for her undergraduate studies.Dr. Muhsin Menekse, Purdue University at West Lafayette Muhsin Menekse is an Assistant Professor at Purdue University with a joint appointment in the School of Engineering Education and the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. Dr. Menekse’s primary research focus is on exploring K-16 students’ engagement and learning of engineering and science con- cepts by creating innovative instructional resources and conducting interdisciplinary quasi-experimental research studies in and out of classroom environments. Dr. Menekse is the recipient of the 2014 William Elgin Wickenden
specialization courses designed to meet students'graduation profile. Also, the curriculum includes four integrative courses, whose aim is toincorporate knowledge acquired by students from previous courses and integrate it into activitiesfor current projects and/or for use by companies out in the field. The last integrating course iscalled Degree Portfolio and culminates with the completion of the study program. This course isbased on multidisciplinary projects carried out by teachers of different specialties, finishing in anindividual examination before a commission composed of the course lecturers and externalevaluators who are invited exclusively for this process.Around 70% of college courses are specialized and are concentrated in the last 3 years of
modeling. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Assessing the Impact of an Introduction to Mechanical Engineering Course on the Capstone Design ProcessAbstractEngineers use scientific principles to design and build machines, structures, and other items tosupport humanity. A fundamental understanding of the design process and applying it to novel,ill-defined problems and situations is integral to success as an engineer. Introduction toengineering courses have become ubiquitous in engineering programs across the nation. Thesecourses provide first-year students with a broad overview of the engineering profession and oftenprovide students an
American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Ashmun Express - A Mobile-Based Study Application for STEM StudentsAbstractThere has been an increase in the usage of technology in classrooms nationwide, fromsmartboards to study applications. The dearth of the latter as a part of the curriculum for STEMstudents in higher education and particularly at a historically black university prompted twoprofessors in biology and computer science to develop a mobile application that focuses on mathapplications in a variety of biological fields.The prime objective of the mobile app - codenamed Ashmun Express - is to serve as a tool forearly career STEM majors, almost all of whom have
and ideas and help promote interpersonal skills. Twoparticipants acknowledged an increase in awareness of the complex, dynamic nature of researchgroups: “Through this research group, I have learned the dynamics of working in a team with engineering peers. This has included learning to compromise and combine ideas that other members may have, as well as reaching out to them for more information or specific requests when necessary.” “From working with others, I have learned that not everyone approaches the same problem in the same manner, and there are multiple effective ways to solve a problem.”These responses shed light on the importance of integrating a scaffolding technique to promote thetechnical, communication, and
inclusion at each institution has also been an ongoingconsortium research focus and theme [6].As Redshirt programs represent an alternative access pathway to and through engineering fornon-traditional engineering students, research efforts were initially focused on the programcomponents first encountered by Redshirt students - namely the first-year academic curriculum,community-building including pre-matriculation summer bridge programs, providingscholarships via the NSF S-STEM grant, and establishing a culture of high-touch academicadvising and support services from the first year onwards [9]. This paper continues the focus oninvestigating diverse student success in Redshirt programs, but extends the analysis beyond theexperience of first-year
has a strong focus on transdisciplinary approaches to scientific problem solving and education.Dr. Yan Sun, Mississippi State University Dr. Yan Sun is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Instructional Systems and Workforce Devel- opment, Mississippi State University. She received her Ph.D. degree in Learning, Design, & Technology from Purdue University and completed her post-doctoral research work at Texas A&M University. Dr. Sun’s research revolves around the area where STEM education intersects with technology. She has ex- pertise in quantitative and mixed-methods research and has been applying quantitative and mixed-methods methodologies in her research on innovative technology-integrated STEM
queer engineering reading group comprised of undergraduate andgraduate students and faculty members. Studies over the last decade have shown that LGBTQIA+engineering students have continuously felt excluded and devalued in STEM spaces. A key factorin this chilly climate is the social-technical dualism that is often strictly enforced in engineeringcurriculum. Professors and students alike see discussing politics and social issues as irrelevant tothe highly technical curriculum. As a result, queer identities are erased from engineering andstudents are never able to formally connect engineering with their queer (or other) identity in anymeaningful way. In an effort to combat this, we have implemented a LGBTQIA+ reading groupthat challenges the
additionaladvantages to students, instructors, and authors.References[1] Koller, D., & Ng, A. (2013, January). The online revolution: Education for everyone. InSeminar Presentation at the Said Business School, Oxford University. Retrieved from http://www.youtube. com/watch.[2] Mohammed, M. K. O. (2020, February). Teaching Formal Languages through Visualizations,Simulators, Auto-graded Exercises, and Programmed Instruction. In Proceedings of the 51stACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (pp. 1429-1429).[3] Basitere, M., & Ivala, E. N. (2017). An Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the use ofMultimedia and Wiley Plus Web-Based Homework System in Enhancing Learning in TheChemical Engineering Extended Curriculum Program Physics Course
-degree-of-freedomsystems and of a two-dimensional array of coupled oscillators. These projects are based on theidea of educating our students in the STEM disciplines ‒ essentially in physics, mathematicsand computer programming ‒ in an interdisciplinary and applied approach. Rather than onlyteaching the mentioned disciplines as separate and discrete subjects, our student researchprojects integrate them into a cohesive learning paradigm based on real-world applications[5].The course Information Systems and Programming in the second semester of our AutomotiveEngineering bachelor's degree program forms the basis of the kind of undergraduate researchprojects our students are working on. In this course the programming language C# isintroduced, an
middle school in Phoenix, Arizona.Dr. Cheryl A Bodnar, Rowan University Dr. Bodnar is an Associate Professor in the Experiential Engineering Education Department at Rowan University. Her research interests relate to the incorporation of active learning techniques such as game- based learning in undergraduate classes as well as integration of innovation and entrepreneurship into the engineering curriculum. In particular, she is interested in the impact that these tools can have on stu- dent perception of the classroom environment, motivation and learning outcomes. She was selected to participate in the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) Frontiers of Engineering Education Sympo- sium in 2013, awarded the American
Chemical Engineering. Samantha aspires to work in the cosmetics industry creating products.Ms. Rebecca Hansson, Rowan University I am involved in an engineering clinic at my school that is working on a paper for this.Dr. Cheryl A. Bodnar, Rowan University Dr. Bodnar is an Associate Professor in the Experiential Engineering Education Department at Rowan University. Her research interests relate to the incorporation of active learning techniques such as game- based learning in undergraduate classes as well as integration of innovation and entrepreneurship into the engineering curriculum. In particular, she is interested in the impact that these tools can have on stu- dent perception of the classroom environment
contributions to STEM. This paperdiscusses how she accomplished this somewhat hidden achievement and suggests a video anddiscussion activity geared toward prompting undergraduates to reframe their origin stories forcomputer science to include women. In another paper, we discuss the details of her algorithmand present a working program for use as an assignment for students in beginning computerclasses. IntroductionIn our engineering curriculum, we need to emphasize the human aspects of science andengineering. This need is clearly recognized by our accreditation agency, ABET, which requiresa portion of the curriculum to be set aside for such exposure. In order to be creative leaders inScience and Engineering
topic of interest in K-12 education. Childrenthat are exposed at an early age to STEM curriculum, such as computer programming andcomputational thinking, demonstrate fewer obstacles entering technical fields [1]. Increasedknowledge of programming and computation in early childhood is also associated with betterproblem solving, decision-making, basic number sense, language skills, and visual memory [2].As a digital competence, coding is explicitly regarded as a key 21st Century Skill, as the“literacy of today,” such that its acquisition is regarded as essential to sustain economicdevelopment and competitiveness [3]. Hence, the reliable evaluation of students’ process data incontext of problem solving tasks that require CT is of great